Xf. Wu et al., A CASE-CONTROL STUDY OF WOOD DUST EXPOSURE, MUTAGEN SENSITIVITY, AND LUNG-CANCER RISK, Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention, 4(6), 1995, pp. 583-588
The associations between lung cancer risk, mutagen sensitivity (a mark
er of cancer susceptibility), and a putative lung carcinogen, wood dus
t, were assessed in a hospital-based case-control study, There were 11
3 African-American and 67 Mexican-American cases with newly diagnosed,
previously untreated lung cancer and 270 controls, frequency-matched
on age, ethnicity, and sex. Mutagen sensitivity (1 chromatid break/cel
l after short-term bleomycin treatment) was associated with statistica
lly significant elevated risk for lung cancer [odds ratio (OR) = 4.3;
95% confidence intervals (CI) = 2.3-7.9], Wood dust exposure was also
a significant predictor of risk (overall OR = 3.5; CI = 1.4-8.6) after
controlling for smoking and mutagen sensitivity, When stratified by e
thnicity, wood dust exposure was a significant risk factor for African
-Americans (OR = 5.5; CI = 1.6-18.9) but not for Mexican-Americans (OR
= 2.0; CI = 0.5-8.1). The ORs were 3.8 and 4.8 for non-small cell lun
g cancer in Mexican-Americans and African-Americans, respectively, but
were only statistically significant for African-Americans (CI = 1.2-1
8.5), Stratified analysis suggested evidence of strong interactions be
tween wood dust exposure and both mutagen sensitivity and smoking in l
ung cancer risk.